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Deborah feldman exodus a memoir
Deborah feldman exodus a memoir






deborah feldman exodus a memoir

Book Synopsis The definitive follow-up to Unorthodox (the basis for the award-winning Netflix series)-now updated with more than 50 percent new material-the unforgettable story of what happened in the years after Deborah Feldman left a religious sect in Williamsburg in order to forge her own path in the world.

deborah feldman exodus a memoir

Describing the sort of men she finds herself attracted to, Feldman notes that they are "ridiculously hot and brainless." When she observes that "I still have a tendency to fall for the foreign, for the man who comes in an exotic package," one has to wonder why this is information worth sharing.About the Book Portions of this book were previously published in Exodus by Deborah Feldman. The most unseemly aspects of this memoir are those that detail Feldman's love life.

deborah feldman exodus a memoir

But perhaps it's just as well, since the writing - bombastic, self-centered and utterly unoriginal - mirrors a lack of nuance and self-reflection that is really the heart of the issue here.

deborah feldman exodus a memoir

A paragraph describing herself bicycling through Paris begins: "I biked nervously" a few sentences on, the author says: "I cycled leisurely." Similarly, poor turns of phrases like "I found myself in Paris" could easily have been cleaned up. Any decent editor should have picked up on the inconsistencies in the writing itself. Though it's scant consolation, Feldman may not be the only one at fault for the way this book turned out. Noting that she does not want to expose him to the Holocaust, she goes on to say: "I decided to show him 'Fiddler on the Roof,' to explain to him what Jewish life had once been like, without exception." Surely there are other options, and it speaks poorly of Feldman that she can come up with nothing better. What's truly shocking is the fact that, in her quest to create for herself a sense of Jewishness quite apart from the kind she was raised with, and to convey an understanding of Jewish history and identity to her young son, Feldman is at a loss. As she walks through the Jewish ghetto in Paris, Feldman is inexplicably "struck" by the fact that the Williamsburg in which she was raised "was a ghetto." The book is rife with such hyperbole, as when Feldman, recounting her reaction to a Nazi propaganda poster in the Art Institute of Chicago, notes that "nothing could have prepared me for its assault on my consciousness." Elsewhere she is "shocked" and left "gaping" by events and conversations that hardly warrant such dramatic responses.








Deborah feldman exodus a memoir